| transname =Noise Sign "Biwa of Euphoric Song"<ref>The Japanese name of this spell (Dai Nesshou Biwa) is almost identical to that of an item in the video game Sengoku Basara 2 Heroes "Nesshou Biwa" (Biwa of Euphoric Song).</ref>

| transname =Elegy "Human and Koto Die Together" <ref>Possibly meant as a variation on the idiom "人琴倶亡", referring to great mourning for someone's death. The phrase is derived from an anecdote about [[wikipedia:Wang Xianzhi (calligrapher)|Wang Xianzhi]], whose koto is said to have become out of tune after his death.</ref>

−

| difficulty =5

+

| owner =Yatsuhashi Tsukumo

+

| stage =5th Day

+

| difficulty =5

+

| comment =

}}

}}

{{Spell Card Info

{{Spell Card Info

−

| type =isc

+

| type =143

−

| image =[[File:Th143SC032.jpg|192px|Screenshot]]

+

| image =[[File:Th143SC32.jpg|192px|Screenshot]]

−

| number =5 - 6

+

| number =5 - 6

−

| name =楽譜「スコアウェブ」

+

| sttitle =無音の楽譜

−

| transname =

+

| sttitletrans =Silent Score

−

| owner =Benben Tsukumo

+

| name =楽譜「スコアウェブ」

−

| stage =Day 5

+

| transname =Score "Score Web"

−

| difficulty =6

+

| owner =Benben Tsukumo

+

| stage =5th Day

+

| difficulty =6

+

| comment =

}}

}}

{{Spell Card Info

{{Spell Card Info

−

| type =isc

+

| type =143

−

| image =[[File:Th143SC033.jpg|192px|Screenshot]]

+

| image =[[File:Th143SC33.jpg|192px|Screenshot]]

−

| number =5 - 7

+

| number =5 - 7

−

| name =太鼓「ファンタジックウーファー」

+

| sttitle =超重低音

−

| transname =

+

| sttitletrans =Super Heavy Bass

−

| owner =Raiko Horikawa

+

| name =太鼓「ファンタジックウーファー」

−

| stage =Day 5

+

| transname =Taiko "Fantastic Woofer"

−

| difficulty =7

+

| owner =Raiko Horikawa

+

| stage =5th Day

+

| difficulty =7

+

| comment =

}}

}}

{{Spell Card Info

{{Spell Card Info

−

| type =isc

+

| type =143

−

| image =[[File:Th143SC034.jpg|192px|Screenshot]]

+

| image =[[File:Th143SC34.jpg|192px|Screenshot]]

−

| number =5 - 8

+

| number =5 - 8

−

| name =両吟「星降る唄」

+

| sttitle =美しき夜は、避けるしかないのか

−

| transname =

+

| sttitletrans =In This Beautiful Night, Must We Do Nothing But Dodge?

↑Possibly meant as a variation on the idiom "人琴倶亡", referring to great mourning for someone's death. The phrase is derived from an anecdote about Wang Xianzhi, whose koto is said to have become out of tune after his death.